BLOCKCHAIN: Why Chris Dixon Still Thinks It Matters

The Next Big Idea

08-02-2024 • 1 hr 5 mins

Seventy-two billion dollars. That, according to the Grifter Counter™, is the amount of money that's been swallowed up by crypto and blockchain scams and crashes. It's an enormous sum — but one that may not surprise you if you've kept up with the news. Bitcoin lost more than 60% of its value in 2022. FTX, once the world's third-largest crypto exchange, collapsed, and its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, was later found guilty on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy. And it's not just crypto that has seen dark days. Remember NFTs? They were once touted as a revolutionary new form of digital ownership made possible by the blockchain. Today, however, 95% of them have lost all of their value. That's right. All of it. So it would seem like a suboptimal time to publish a book arguing that "blockchains and the software movement around them — typically called crypto or web3 — provide the only plausible path to sustaining the original vision of the internet as an open platform that incentivizes creativity and entrepreneurship." But that's precisely what Chris Dixon, founder of a16z crypto, has done with "Read Write Own: Building the Next Era of the Internet." Chris, who spoke with Rufus in a live taping of this show last week, says that while blockchains have been "maligned and associated with grift, casino culture, and fraud," they are tools that can be used for good. Today on the show, he makes that case.

You Might Like

The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
The Daily Stoic
The Daily Stoic
Daily Stoic | Wondery
Entre Elle et Lui
Entre Elle et Lui
Anne-Marie Ménard & Franck Forest
Parenthèse
Parenthèse
Studio SF
Am I the Genius?
Am I the Genius?
youtube.com/@amithegenius
The Ranveer Show
The Ranveer Show
BeerBiceps aka Ranveer Allahbadia
The Rachel Hollis Podcast
The Rachel Hollis Podcast
Three Percent Chance
All Ears English Podcast
All Ears English Podcast
Lindsay McMahon and Michelle Kaplan